Yeah i agree. But i think it will go through another round of trials, either high or judge court. People with more legal knowledge can elaborate further.

Mollah's v sign was his downfall because his audacity was a shame for the rest of us and that prompted massive awakening. AL might not have enough time to execute all of them but the quick trial was a good example from them and might set some precedent for future. So credit to AL. Previous BNP rule failed to do similar things.

A reason to put a country's reputation at risk!
I firmly believe the idiot BNP is not going to do any fullish thing but it their Pakistani sympethiser who want this country to be a failed state like Pak would do something that will stop event like World cup or Asia cup away from us!

BRTC bus now gets Wi-Fi’ed
As per government’s commitment towards a digital Bangladesh, Ministry of ICT and Bangladesh Road Transport Corporation (BRTC) came up with an exclusive venture: BUS with Wi-Fi service. Despite being very common in North American, European and countries in Asia Pacific, this would be the very first time in Bangladesh were passengers will be getting wireless connectivity throughout their entire commute.

Under the active supervision of Access to Information project (a2i) of Prime Minister’s Office, 20 buses would be rolled out in the streets. This concept was proposed months ago but it took awhile for the ministries and the bodies to actually come to an agreement to start and manage the service.

Every year, from June through October, Jashim Salam’s house in Chittagong, Bangladesh, floods. Not once, or twice, but five or six times—per month. It’s like that throughout the city, where several million people live alongside the sea. The water flows in from the Karnaphuli River, pushed beyond its banks by the rising tide of the Bay of Bengal.

This is a recent phenomenon, one many blame on climate change and rising seas coupled with the annual monsoon season. Residents have had to adapt and adjust to the enormous hardships of a life too often lived under water. Salam has been documenting just what it’s like for him and his neighbors. The photographer has produced two series about the flooding. Water World offers an intimate look at life in his neighborhood during a flood. Water World 2 is a powerful series of portraits of people standing in their homes, or in the streets of their communities, surrounded by water.

The portraits are meant to show just how absurd life has become. But it also offers a timeline of sorts. He’s photographed children who have grown up with the flooding and consider it, if not normal, than at least a regular thing. But subjects his age—Salam is 35—and older appreciate how radically their lives and communities have changed. His portraits are both beautiful and shocking. For most, the idea of living knee-deep in water for days on end is incomprehensible.